The BJP today blamed the Congress for the impasse in Parliament and dubbed it “anti-democratic”, claiming that the party continues to have contempt for democracy as it had during the Emergency.
Briefing reporters on the BJP parliamentary party meeting, which was also attended by Prime Minister Narendra Modi and its president Amit Shah, Parliamentary Affairs Minister Ananth Kumar said the government has been talking to different parties to break the deadlock in Parliament and targeted the Congress.
In the meeting, Kumar had spoken to parliamentarians about continuing deadlock in Parliament, whose second phase of the Budget Session has been a washout so far. He also made light of Congress chief Sonia Gandhi’s invite to opposition parties for a dinner, saying her dinner politics will be only about dinner while the BJP under Modi remains a “winner” with the ruling NDA attracting more allies.
Kumar cited BJP’s alliance with local parties in North East states to claim that the NDA is becoming “NDA plus”. “The Congress is becoming more and more isolated,” he said.
“Repressive mindset”
Kumar then raked up the excesses during the Emergency declared across the country by the then Indira Gandhi government in mid 1970s and accused the Congress of harbouring a similar mindset. Congress had imposed censors, extended Parliament’s tenure to six years from five years and put opposition leaders in jails during the period, he said.
“It continues to have a similar repressive mindset toward democracy. The Congress is not letting Parliament function. This is our duty to let it work and the government has been doing everything to ensure that it happens,” he said. He also claimed that the Congress was running away from a debate on the PNB scam as it “feared” that many skeletons in its cupboard will tumble out if a debate occurred.
The proceedings of the Lok Sabha and the Rajya Sabha this morning were disrupted for the seventh consecutive day today as various parties continued with their protests on several issues, including the PNB scam.

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